One year ago, 91°”Íű reported on the effects of the Trinity Test. Thursday, July 16, 2015, is the 70th anniversary of the day the world's first nuclear bomb detonated in New Mexico.
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This month marks the anniversary of worldâs first atomic plume rising into New Mexicoâs sky. The day the nuclear bomb went off, there were 19,000 people living near the Trinity test blast site, including . Residents werenât given any warning of the detonation, and the health effects lingered through the decadesâbut those facts arenât yet part of public conversation or historic memory.
It was July 16, 1945. Bing Crosby was at the top of the charts. About 5,000 people had television sets in the whole country. And âthe gadget,â a plutonium-core nuclear device, was raised to the top of a steel tower at White Sands.
The black-and-white pictures from the time are astonishing: Folks wear nothing more protective than sunglasses to watch the detonation from a handful of miles away. Scientists and reporters visit the site almost immediately to examine the remains of the tower. People pick up handfuls of the glassy residue left behind, called Trinitite or Alamogordo glass.
Unknowing Witnesses
Today, Tina Cordova is the president of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium. She said people in and around her town have suffered as a result of the Trinity test, dying from a variety of cancers and other health conditions. âI got thyroid cancer when I was 39, and the question that they asked me when they diagnosed me was: When were you exposed to radiation?â she said.
The story of the true legacy of trinity has never really been told, she added. In an effort document what the test was like for New Mexicans, Cordova conducted interviews with people in and around Tularosa who were unknowing witnesses to the detonation of that first nuclear bomb. âOne man that I knowâwho is incredibly sick with cancerâwas outside with his father, and they were putting gas from a gas can into his dadâs truck. Everybody that witnessed it has described it as almost brighter than daylight,â she said. âSoon after that, they felt this shockwave that almost knocked them off their feet. We didnât know what had just happened.â
Cordova said New Mexicans were unwitting participants in the worldâs largest science projectâand then forgotten. The explosion went 7.5 miles into the atmosphere. A few hours later, it rained. Yet no one told area residents not to drink from their cisterns.
âWeâve had people come forward and say that for days afterward, the fine ash settled out over everything,â Cordova said. âSo you have this huge plume of ash and debris, all of it radioactive.â
The military tested the bomb, and that was the end of governmental involvement, Cordova saidâno one came back conduct tests or to do any cleanup. âWeâve been saying this for a very long time, that they walked away and never came back. I know nobody came into the community of Tularosa and said, âWeâre going to meet with the people and tell them the truth about what happened.â â
Historians confirm that the government lied after the explosion, saying there had been a bunch of old ammunition lying around that exploded. It wasnât until atomic bombs were dropped on Japan a few weeks later that New Mexicans learned what had really taken place.
Between 1945 and 1962, the U.S. military tested almost 200 nuclear weapons. The of 1990 has doled out hundreds of thousands of dollarsâbut not to folks downwind of the Trinity test.
Nuclear Dilemma
Olivia Fermi is the granddaughter of Enrico Fermi, the man who demonstrated the first nuclear chain reaction in 1942 as part of the Manhattan Project. He was in New Mexico watching the Trinity test three years later, while his wife lived in Los Alamos. "My grandparents most likely died because of radiation exposure," she said. "My grandfather died of stomach cancer, and my grandmother died of a lung condition that is statistically associated with radiation exposure."
âI grew up with this dilemma about nuclear power and nuclear weapons and nuclear waste. And I didnât really know what to make of it,â she said. âAnd as I got older, I realized that really itâs everyoneâs dilemma.â
Enrico died before Olivia was born, but her grandmother Laura Fermi was a part of her life and a source of inspiration. Laura was an environmentalist, Olivia said: âShe was interested in science.â Eventually, when Laura learned of her husbandâs work on the Manhattan Project, she realized what a complex problem society had with the atomic bomb, according to Olivia. âAll of her work was sparked by that realization.â
Laura Fermi and her colleagues started an air pollution control committee in Chichago in 1959, well before the environmental movement really took off in the 1970s.
We should know about the sacrifice those Americans made.
Olivia visited the Trinity site in 2009, and said she was shocked to learn that the desert had been inhabited. âThat those residents were exposed to radioactive fallout, and that the blast was three times greater than what was expected, thatâs not part of the normal narrative history,â Fermi said. âAnd it should be. We should know about the sacrifice those Americans made.â
Her visit to New Mexico prompted her to chronicle her understanding of the Fermisâ nuclear legacy in her blog: . âItâs an inquiry,â she said. âIâm not presupposing that Iâm going to have the answer. Rather I see that the questions about our nuclear waste, weapons and energy are really complex, and weâre stuck somehow. We need to get through the logjam.â
Without Regard
Olivia Fermi is not the only person recently awoken to the exposure of New Mexicans during the first nuclear detonation. The CDC released in November 2010â65 years after the Trinity testâto investigate radionuclides and chemicals from Site Y of the Manhattan Project. Site Y, by the way, would later come to be known as Los Alamos National Laboratory.
When New Mexicans' exposure to harmful substances is considered, those evaluations are incomplete, according to the report, because they donât take into account internal doses of radioactivity. But that became a factor in determining long-term effects in Japan after the U.S. military dropped Fat Man on Nagasaki less than a month after the Trinity test.
From the report:
â⊠Fat Man device was detonated so close to the ground, members of the public lived less than 20 miles downwind and were not relocated ⊠and lifestyles of local ranchers led to intakes of radioactivity via consumption of water, milk and homegrown vegetables.â
The same was true in New Mexico. Even after the Trinity test spread radiation near Tularosa, local ranchers grew and raised their own food. Jennifer Loukissas with the National Cancer Institute says a team will come in the fall to estimate how much radiation people consumed and what the cancer risks might be. âThe goal of coming to New Mexico is to learn about the diet and lifestyle of Native Americans and Hispanics in the state,â she said. âWe need to know how people were living and what kinds of foods people were eating and drinking.â
Dr. Steve Simon will be trying to reconstruct estimates of the doses people in New Mexico received. âThe measurements were fairly crude in 1945,â he said. âThey measured simply the exposure rate. From that, and from our understanding about radioactive fallout, we can determine actually what kinds of isotopes were present at each location.â
Last month New Mexicoâs senior Sen. Tom Udall gave a speech on the Senate floor in Washington, D.C., saying the Trinity explosion happened without regard for surrounding communities. âRadioactive debris fell from the sky, killing cattle, poisoning water, poisoning food, the air we breathe. The damage was done and would remain long after the test was finished,â Udall said.
His speech marked an amazing moment for downwinder Tina Cordova: Finally, there was some national recognition of her communityâs suffering.
Editor's Note: Olivia Fermi's grandmother was not present at the Trinity Test site when the bomb was detonated as originally reported in this story. Also, more information about Fermi's grandparents' possible radiation related illnesses has been added.